Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Basarab III cel Bătrân ("the Old"), also known as Laiotă Basarab or Basarab Laiotă (? – 22 December 1480) was Voivode of the principality of Wallachia in the 1470s, repeating the achievement of Dan II in being elected by the boyars as voivode on five occasions.

  2. The House of Basarab (also Bazarab or Bazaraad, Romanian: Basarab pronounced ⓘ) was a ruling family of Cuman origin, which had an important role in the establishing of the Principality of Wallachia, giving the country its first line of Princes, one closely related with the Mușatin rulers of Moldavia.

  3. Basarab I (Romanian: ⓘ), also known as Basarab the Founder (Romanian: Basarab Întemeietorul; c. 1270 – 1351/1352), was a voivode and later the first independent ruler of Wallachia who lived in the first half of the 14th century. Many details of his life are uncertain.

  4. We identified the three possible heraldic ways in which the coat of arms of the Basarab House changed through history: • by cadencing the inherited arms for differentiation: changing tinctures and their order, new charges’ addition with political-religious significance, variation of the ordinaries’ number; • by assuming a new coat of arms: arms ...

    • Tiberiu Frăţilă-Felmer
  5. Basarab III cel Bătrân ("the Old"), also known as Laiotă Basarab or Basarab Laiotă (? – 22 December 1480) was Voivode of the principality of Wallachia in the 1470s, repeating the achievement of Dan II in being elected by the boyars as voivode on five occasions.

  6. Oct 2, 2021 · 2021 marks 500 years since the death of Prince Neagoe Basarab who ruled the principality of Wallachia (now part of modern Romania) between 1512 and 1521. Although his reign was relatively short, he contributed to the political, economic, religious, and especially cultural growth of his domain.

  7. People also ask

  8. We identified the three possible heraldic ways in which the coat of arms of the Basarab House changed through history: • by cadencing the inherited arms for differentiation: changing tinctures and their order, new charges’ addition with political-religious significance, variation of the ordinaries’ number; • by assuming a new coat of arms: arms ...